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Border Criminologies
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4 pages
1 file
Published on the blog of Border Criminologies. Find the original at: www.law.ox.ac.uk/research-subject-groups/centre-criminology/centreborder-criminologies/blog/2018/06/dispersal
Theoretical Criminology, 2020
The article maps out the multilayered legal governance of immigrant street vendors in Barcelona. The case study is used to develop the literature on crimmigration by suggesting better ways to account for the dynamic, asymmetric, and uneven legal intersections at play in immigration governance. Questioning the idea of a merger between immigration law and criminal law that scholars of crimmigration often imply, the article suggests that it is the heterogeneity and distinction between various legal regimes that is most productive and problematic in the governing of immigrants. The article offers the concept of interlegal jurisdictional games as an alternative point of entry to study these dynamics. http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1362480618811693
The British Journal of Criminology
Immigrants, Asylum Seekers and Refugees in Times of Crisis: An International Handbook on Migration and Refugee Studies, Management Policies and Governance, 2021
This chapter is based on ethnographic engagement with two first rotations of the BSTs on the Greek island of Chios. This engagement involved in total 24 semi-structured interviews with BST members on Chios and in the Netherlands1 and with humanitarian partner organisations on the island. From these findings we argue that the BSTs is the product of a grounded and context-specific role to policing while their daily working practices are very much shaped by the border realities on the ground. In the context of Chios and based on our findings grounded in participant observation and semi-structured interviews we argue that the BST on Chios is, like its structure suggests, a hybrid actor playing an intermediary role in managing the security of territory and the security of life at the border (see Pallister-Wilkins, 2015). We observed that the BST through contextual constraints and fluid on-the-ground realities took on tasks that could be more traditionally associated with humanitarian organisations engaged in ‘camp management’ (see Agier, 2011; Hyndman, 2000). Such everyday work responding to and attempting to pre-empt the needs of refugees and migrants and ensuring their everyday security as they await a decision on their asylum claim in the ‘hotspot’ of Vial, or in Souda camp or Dipethe camp suggests a broadening of security to include biopolitical humanitarian concerns in practice. We argue that in the context of their everyday work the different rotations of the BST on Chios perform considerable care and human security functions as another ‘social universe’ alongside monitoring, channelling and securing mobility (Bigo, 2014). These findings build on the increased attention to humanitarian concerns in border policing (see Aas and Gundhus, 2015, Little and Vaughan-Williams, 2017; Pallister-Wilkins, 2015; Walters, 2011; Williams, 2015) but also to those who call for attention to the social worlds and everyday practices of border policing (Côté-Boucher et al., 2014; Loftus, 2015).
Urban borderwork: Ethnographies of policing, 2020
This special issue introduces a conceptual framework for ethnographies of urban policing that foregrounds how defining features of the city produce police work, and in turn, how police work produces the city. To address how the mutually productive relationship of policing and the city shape current transformations in the ordering of urban space, the notions of borders and bordering are invoked. In contemporary cities across the global North and South, borders and bordering practices are reconfigured to address mobilities and flows deemed to threaten social order and have thus become manifestations of fear and anxiety linked to these mobilities and flows. At the core of our framework is the argument that urban policing is principally a practice of bordering. By approaching urban policing as a practice of bordering that is informed by material and imaginary manifestations, tensions between (de)territorializing and (de)stabilization are highlighted as both the vehicle and outcome of bordering practices. These tensions, we propose, can be captured through the concept of trembling. Trembling implies both a physical and emotional response to anxiety, excitement and frailty that is paradoxically built into borders and bordering practices. Cities are spaces of hope and desire, yet also breeding grounds for fear and anxiety (Bannister and Fyfe, 2001; England and Simon, 2010). Increasingly, these affective manifestations are linked to and conditioned by perceptions of insider threats and instability; to violence, crime and disorder within and enabled by spatial configurations of the city.
This issue of the European Journal of Policing Studies is the third special issue of this volume (after ‘Policing Metropoles’ and ‘Plural Policing’), and focuses on the domain of diversity and migration. The editors, Daniela Klimke (Police Academy Lower Saxony, Germany) and Fritz Sack (University of Hamburg, Germany), organised a conference in 2014 under the title ‘Migrants as Police Officers’. This conference gave the floor to a number of academics that are working on this domain. This highly relevant topic is now embodied in this special issue of EJPS, that is published under the same title as the conference.The issue is composed of seven papers from an international research community (Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and France). Free abstracts and more details on each contribution on www.maklu-online.eu/ejps
This article focuses on the politics of migrant dispersal that has been enforced in Europe for regaining control over 'unruly' migrants' presence and movements, with a specific focus on the French and on the Italian contexts. The article shows that dispersal can be considered as a spatial strategy of governmentality and that far from being a new policy, it was already adopted to manage former colonised populations. The article argues that strategies of migrant dispersal are today enacted by state authorities, in collaboration with humanitarian actors, for troubling migrants' presence and autonomous movements, as well as for disrupting and dividing temporary migrant collective formations. First, it retraces a colonial genealogy of dispersal, as a political technology used for disciplining unruly populations. Then, it analyses how dispersal strategies have been put into place in France (Calais and Paris) and in Italy (Ventimiglia) not only by scattering migrants across space but also by dismantling migrant spaces of life ('lieux de vie'). The article moves on demonstrating that the politics of dispersal is mainly enforced for preventing the consolidation of migrant multiplicities, criminalising them as 'migrant mobs' and spatially dividing them. The third section of the article brings attention to the effects of migrants' forced hypermobility and to the convoluted geographies that dispersal triggers. It concludes by bringing attention to the increasing criminalisation of migrant support networks that try to prevent the dismantling of migrant autonomous spaces.
Tense contact between the police and migrants in Western societies remains to be an important topic in police scholarship. In sociological studies of the police, this matter is ascribed to the dis-cretionary authority of individual officers that is sanctioned by their departments—not to official policy or direct ethnic or racial orientations. This article (1) discusses the 'policing of migration' literature that claims the exact opposite; (2) applies this literature to the Dutch context in order to show that migrants are increasingly and deliberately targeted for control by numerous public, semi-public and private agencies; (3) empirically explores the ramifications of such 'internal border control' and (4) argues in favour of a synergy between criminological and anthropological work on this topic.
The overall growth of society, fast pace of industrialization, urbanization and technological revolution has affected every aspect of society over a period of time. These changes are also visible in different dimensions of social, cultural and political institutions. They have also influenced human behaviour particularly the criminality and deviance. Local criminals and their criminal activities have crossed their limited conventional physical boundaries. They are operating through a wider network across different states. It has been rightly said "today it is not just the economy that is open, crime too has become globalised. (1) (Jaytilak Guha Roy, P No 134)." Criminal activities have changed in form and content beyond imagination and acquired global character with rapid technological changes. This change has led to emergence of interstate criminal syndicates and gangs specializing in different kinds of crime of their choice and convenience. The new trend of criminal activities has posed several structural and operational challenges for law enforcing agencies of affected states and forced them to adopt different preventive and detective strategy against criminals.
Small Wars Journal, 2015
The spring of 2014 saw three major counter-gang police operations take place in Catalonia, exposing the range of criminal activities by some Latino gangs. While this did not come as a surprise, the details to have emerged confirmed widespread views about their internal dynamics, including the most common weapons and the extensive resort to violence against their own members and those of rival groups, as well as the most significant forms of criminality they engage in. While the Catalan Government remains committed to a comprehensive approach to gang violence, featuring not only police investigations but also social and educational measures, law enforcement is likely to remain central to the public response to this form of organized violence. Catalonia's key geographical location translates into extensive opportunities for organized crime to flourish, and therefore an additional responsibility to prevent it from taking root and having a negative impact on nearby territories.
Cuadernos filosóficos. Segunda época., 2023
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Applied Geochemistry, 2013
Substance Abuse Treatment Prevention and Policy, 2020
Vasiliki Pappa, 2024
Land, Governance, and the Gendered Politics of Displacement in Urban Pakistan, 2021
Journal of Islamic Studies, 2001
Bulletin of Electrical Engineering and Informatics, 2024
Edukasi, 2018
Al-Sabîl: Revue d’Histoire, d’Archéologie et d’Architecture Maghrébines [En ligne], 2024
ICASSP 2019 - 2019 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP)
Journal of neonatal-perinatal medicine, 2017
The Journal of biological chemistry, 1990
АРЧИБАЛД РАЈС У СРПСКИМ МЕДИЈИМА И СРПСКОМ ДРУШТВУ: НЕКАД И САД, 2023